Per court documents. This is not yet broken out in the news cycle or anywhere on social media that I can find.
@humannature
Naturalist with a particular interest in humans: Evolutionary anthropologist, evolutionary psychologist, behavioral economist, studying life history theory, cooperation, and communication. https://sites.google.com/site/ericschniter/
Per court documents. This is not yet broken out in the news cycle or anywhere on social media that I can find.
Great news for conservation!
All formerly marked and mapped OHV routes in critical tortoise habitat of the Western Mojave have been ordered closed per federal ruling (Center for Biological Diversity v. U.S. Bureau of Land Mgmt., Case No. 21-cv-07171-SI (N.D. Cal. Jan. 23, 2026))!
π₯¬ππ’π
I feel something like broken-hearted pain when observing the constant destruction of natural stuff that pretty much no one values. Natural spaces are turning into shitholes before our eyes - many of which are blind to the reality.
Things just aren't what they used to be. www.nature.com/articles/s44...
Long-term and short-term knowledge is a very useful way to frame things for the study of culture transmission. This study on culture from an evolutionary perspective makes a really important contribution to the literature. Congratulations!
πNew paper!π
How is knowledge transmitted across generations in a foraging society?
With @danielredhead.bsky.social
we found: In BaYaka foragers, long-term skills pass in smaller, sparser networks, while short-term food info circulates broadly & reciprocally
academic.oup.com/pnasnexus/ar...
What is blueskyism?
Silver explains, essentially:
(1) Smalltentism
(2) Credentialism
(3) Catastophism
www.natesilver.net/p/what-is-bl...
Truth!
South American Indians developed a technique of color modification of the feathers on living birds, called tapirage π€― They took young parrots, plucked their feathers, and smeared the bald spots with frog blood to which "certain other substances were added." The new feathers grew in yellow.
I just checked LibGen and it has 25 of my products. I don't really care about defending intellectual property in this context. I am happy to put my scientific contributions out in the world for all to access for free and am optimistic about AI gleaning information from peer-reviewed pubs.
News is that The University of California system's board of regents has now put an end to the use of such diversity statements at those schools.
heard via @robsica.bsky.social but on X
They argue that these animals could help heal the Arctic ecosystem in several ways, (1) restoring the grassland ecosystem, (2) slowing permafrost thaw, (3) facilitating carbon sequestration, (4) revitalizing ecosystem and enhancing biodiversity in Arctic.
Fwiw, these issues are addressed in news stories I've heard. Colossal argues that reintroducing genetically engineered cold-tolerant elephant-mammoth hybridsβto Arctic tundra could bring several potential benefits, primarily centered around ecological restoration and climate change mitigation.
π Please RT & share to help spread the word! @athenaaktipis.bsky.social @jeremykoster.bsky.social @humannature.bsky.social @kenbergerum.bsky.social
Roy Baumeister called ego depletion "one of the most replicable findings in social psychology." As someone who spent 20 years studying itβand ultimately had to admit it wasn't realβI have to respectfully disagree. Here's my perspective of what went so wrong.
This is a good read about the role of modern day trackers in wildlife science and conservation:
Even as A.I. Technology Races Ahead, the Prehistoric Science of Wildlife Tracking Is Making a Comeback -
www.smithsonianmag.com/science-natu...
Chimpanzees synchronize urination, suggesting ties to group cohesion and social dynamics. New research highlights this overlooked behaviorβs potential evolutionary significance. #Chimpanzees #BehavioralEcology #Primatology #Anthropology
And a final tip I picked up from Nathaniel Wilcox, which I need to often remind myself of: avoid using phrasing like "you should" and substitute something softer like "it would be helpful..."
4. Only then are you permitted to say so much as a word of rebuttal or criticism.
3. You should mention anything you have learned from your target.
2. You should list any points of agreement (especially if they are not matters of general or widespread agreement).
1. You should attempt to re-express your targetβs position so clearly, vividly, and fairly that your target says, βThanks, I wish Iβd thought of putting it that way.β
Writing a critical review and again sticking with Dennett's timeless formula www.themarginalian.org/2014/03/28/d...
Four steps:
I've always thought the difficulty knowing what "it" is is due to the broad scope of anthropology: ~the study of all things human.
Giving serious consideration to assigning students the task of editing wikipedia. These resources are great:
Presumably the humans are told the task is to successfully move the object from A to B. What incentive motivates the ants' coordinated action in this task?
βRace is not a biological category that naturally produces health disparities because of genetic differences. Race is a political category that has staggering biological consequences because of the impact of social inequality on peopleβs health.β
β Dorothy E. Roberts, Fatal Intervention (pp 11)
tagging coauthors: Dan Cummings, Paul Hooper, Jon Stieglitz, Ben Trumble, Hilly Kaplan, @mgurven.bsky.social
Check out "Who helps Tsimane youth?" and other great papers in the special issue of Hunter Gatherer Research focused on stepfamilies, adoption and other forms of the family in forager society. π§ͺ
www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/10.3828/...